Category Archives: Business & Politics

Business & Politics

Forests Canada Welcomes Three New Members to Board of Directors

By Forests Canada
Cision Newswire
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

BARRIE, ON – Forests Canada recently added three new members to its Board of Directors: Mary-Ellen Anderson Jacob Handel , and Dr. Paula Murphy Ives . …Mary-Ellen Anderson has over 30 years of experience developing innovative practices and strategic partnerships across varied sectors while leading teams at ALUS Canada and Microsoft. …A member of Pine Creek First Nation (Minegoziibe Anishinabe), Jacob Handel brings over two decades of experience working in Indigenous relations along with a wealth of knowledge in engaging with Indigenous people in the resource industries throughout North America . …Dr. Paula Murphy Ives has been working on issues related to social capital, strategic philanthropy, and impact investing for over a decade and has significant global experience in philanthropy, sustainability, and global governance. …Replacing Cockwell as Board Chair is Christine Leduc , who has had close ties with Forests Canada since she was an Ontario Envirothon Regional Champion in 2005.

Mary-Ellen Anderson, Jacob Handel, and Dr. Paula Murphy Ives

Christine Leduc

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Canadian Forest Owners Asks Political Parties About Their Commitments to Canada’s 480,000 Woodlot Owners and Their Families

By Andrew de Vries
Canadian Forest Owners
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Canadian Forest Owners (CFO) reached out to the five federal political parties with current representation in parliament to ask how their party would support the thousands of rural communities across Canada where these forest owners live. Canadian Forest Owners represents 480,000 private forest owners from Prince Edward Island to Vancouver Island. These forest owners are largely family owned, small business, who own over a tenth of Canada’s managed forests, supporting every mill across the country, and accounting for nearly 20 percent of Canada’s total forest production. Private forest landowners provide solutions to climate change and real socio-economic development opportunities in rural communities from coast to coast. Here’s what they had to say…

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US trade policies cast shadow of uncertainty over Canadian forestry industry

By Rosa Saba
The Canadian Press in BNN Bloomberg
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

President Trump’s shifting trade policies are creating uncertainty for the Canadian forestry industry. Sean McLaren, CEO of West Fraser Timber, says the potential inflationary effects of tariffs could weigh on future demand. “Looking forward, we see considerable macroeconomic uncertainty, particularly stemming from the US’s evolving tariff policies”. He said the company is planning for multiple scenarios. …RBC’s Matthew McKellar said that the outlook for the paper and forest products industry is highly uncertain when it comes to demand. “All of this uncertainty is bad for business,” said Derek Nighbor, CEO of Forest Products Association of Canada. Nighbor added that any impact on Canadian lumber companies will also affect pulp and paper: “We’ve got all of these downstream industries that depend on those inputs.” …McKellar noted that companies like West Fraser, Interfor and Canfor are geographically diverse, meaning potential softening of demand could be the bigger concern.

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Canadian softwood producers highlight American investments as U.S. probes lumber imports

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Major softwood producers with head offices in Canada say they have accounted for more than half of the growth in capacity in the US South over the past decade, highlighting their American investments as the Trump administration investigates lumber imports. The US South appeals to forestry companies because of the region’s abundant timber, the Canadian government said in a 57-page filing this month to the US Department of Commerce in a bid to avert potential tariffs. …In seeking to stave off tariffs, the Canadian government and several producers from Canada believe that the foray into the US South should be viewed as evidence of them being aligned with the Trump administration’s “America First” trade and investment agenda. …However, the U.S. Lumber Coalition is arguing that new tariffs are necessary. …Canadian producers are worried that if new lumber tariffs hit 25 per cent… total levies could reach nearly 60%. [to access the full story a Globe & Mail subscription is required]

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Trump tariffs stack the odds against a forestry industry already struggling to survive

By Joe O’Connor
The Financial Post
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

James Furney, mayor of Port McNeill, BC… is trying to stay upbeat, but his lumber town was already suffering before the threat of Trump’s trade war. …“To think that anyone is going to be insulated from what is going on with Trump would be delusional,” Furney said. “We are a forestry town and people around town are already watching their wallets and curtailing their spending, and businesses that should be ramping up now to hire summer students aren’t going to be hiring.” …In short, B.C. has plenty of wood and plenty of potential buyers for it, especially in the US, which was a $5.69-billion export market for the province in 2024, but not enough of that wood has been getting cut in recent years. That makes for gloomy days on the West Coast; a malaise that could spread to Ontario and Quebec and push the industry to the brink of collapse.

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BC Lumber Trade Council warns that softwood tariffs could lead to soaring US rebuilding costs

By Brent Jang
The Globe and Mail
April 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, International

The BC Lumber Trade Council is warning that threatened US tariffs stacked on top of duties against Canadian softwood could lead to soaring costs for residential construction, including in American states seeking to rebuild after natural disasters. Hurricane Helene damaged or destroyed an estimated 73,000 homes in North Carolina last fall, and wildfires burned more than 15,000 structures in California in January, the BC council said in a submission this month to the US Department of Commerce. “Significant hurricane reconstruction efforts are also underway in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee,” the council’s 55-page filing says. The submission was a response to a March 1 executive order… which also threatened new lumber tariffs, cited Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, allowing him to connect the softwood file with national security. The probe into softwood and other wood products is scheduled to be completed by the end of this year. [to access the full story a Globe and Mail subscription is required]

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Unifor calls for Team Canada approach to forestry following preliminary decision to more than double U.S. softwood lumber duties

Unifor
April 8, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

TORONTO—Unifor is calling for a large-scale Team Canada approach to support the forestry sector across Canada after the U.S. Department of Commerce’s recent announcement that will more than double the combined duties on Canadian softwood lumber. “We have an opportunity to address two crises with one made-in-Canada plan to build the housing we desperately need with our own mass timber and lumber,” said Unifor National President Lana Payne. “Unifor is calling on federal and provincial party leaders to commit to an industrial strategy for forestry that will support forestry operations in every province across the country and keep Canadians working.” Unifor represents more than 22,100 forestry workers across 10 provinces who work in sawmills, pulp and paper plants and in wood products manufacturing. …Canada must think big on forestry and use our vast lumber resources to facilitate a national affordable home building strategy.

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US lumber industry pushes back at BC’s Forests Minister

By Paul James
Radio NL – Kamloops News
April 13, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

A coalition representing part of the US lumber industry is firing a shot at BC’s Forests Minister, who has suggested the State-side industry is not willing to engage. “I think the B.C. Forest[s] Minister should spend more time addressing B.C.’s massive excess capacity which is the source of Canada’s unfair dumping practices than trying to play politics,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen, of the U.S. Lumber Council. The comments are in direct response to earlier comments by BC’s Forests Minster when asked if there can be overriding agreement to bring the broader dispute to an end. “A meeting with Zoltan was scheduled,” said Parmar. He says that meeting never came to be, saying the US side dropped it at the last minute due to members of the media discovering the session was going to take place.

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Canadian Excess Lumber Capacity at the Root of Unfair Trade Practices

By The US Lumber Coalition
PR Newswire
April 11, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

WASHINGTON — Since 2016, Canada’s excess lumber capacity has surged…[and] the Canadian industry is directing its excess lumber capacity and production to the US market. The impact on US lumber producers, workers, and forestry dependent communities has been devastating. “BC Premier Eby’s claim that US trade law enforcement is an attack on Canadian workers is entirely backwards,” stated Zoltan van Heyningen. “Canadian violations of US trade laws are an attack on US workers, US companies, and President Trump’s goals to further increase US lumber production.”,”Canada and their US allies, the NAHB, are engaged in a massive misinformation campaign trying to scare the American public into accepting Canada’s unfair trade practices,” added van Heyningen. “Let’s face it, Canada does not care about the U.S. consumer. …Canadian companies pay the duties imposed at the border on softwood lumber imports, not the US consumer or U.S. taxpayer”.

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B.C. supports advanced manufacturing of forestry products

By Ministry of Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation
Government of British Columbia
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

New support for forestry-sector manufacturers in the province is creating sustainable jobs, strengthening local supply chains, establishing new made-in-B.C. products and reinforcing B.C.’s position as a leader in mass-timber innovation. …Through the BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund (BCMJF), the Government of B.C. is contributing as much as $11 million toward four forestry-sector capital projects in the province. The projects are helping B.C.-based forestry-product manufacturers grow their businesses by constructing new production facilities, purchasing new equipment and adding new high-value product lines, while creating and protecting hundreds of jobs.

  • Spearhead Timberworks Inc., will received $7.5 million to drive its expansion. 
  • Westlam Industries Ltd. will receive $1.5 million to construct a new production facility and install new equipment.
  • Mercer Celgar Limited Partnership will receive $1.75 million to modernize its small-log line to process smaller-diameter logs and a wider range of low-grade fibre.
  • Greyback Construction Ltd., will receive $235,000 to begin production of prefabricated exterior walls and floors.

Canadian Press in the CBC News: B.C. invests $11 million on value-added lumber manufacturing amid U.S. uncertainty

Castanet, by Timothy Schafer: Province contributes cash through Jobs Fund to help value-added wood manufacturers

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A look inside West Kelowna’s iconic Gorman Bros. Lumber mill

By Shannon Ainslie
InfoTel News
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

Anyone travelling between West Kelowna and Peachland has passed the decades-old Gorman Bros. sawmill with its teal sided warehouses and tidy stacks of lumber. This video takes viewers on an educational tour through the facility as logs travel through the noisy sawmill, are dried in a kiln and sent to the planer to have the final finishing done. The logs come out of the process as smooth, beautiful boards ready to be packaged and shipped, while the wood waste is repurposed.

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Americans are still going to need our forest products

By Albert Koehler, P.Eng.
Prince George Citizen
April 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

As of 2024 there are 2,500 sawmills in the U.S. and 850 in Canada. However, these numbers have to be looked at in context of housing starts in both countries. An interesting number: The rebuilding of 16,000 houses that burnt down in California require 4,300 fully loaded eight-axle trailer trucks with dimensioned lumber. We must be innovative and need more skilled workers. We should have a few smaller mills and/or machinery producing metric size timber for Europe and Japan. …We cannot change what is happening in the US, but despite an executive order from higher up, many mills in the US are suffering from a steady lack of timber supply and do not have the manpower or loggers required to steadily feed some of the mills. In Montana for example, 36 mills have closed over the last years because of a lack of timber supply, as well as a lack of loggers.

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Domtar Named One of the “Private 25 Most Sustainable Corporations in the World”

By Domtar
Cision Newswire
April 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

RICHMOND, BC – Domtar, a leading North American manufacturer of diversified forest products, has been recognized among the “Private 25 Most Sustainable Corporations in the World” by Corporate Knights, a leading sustainable economy media and research organization. Global companies with at least $1 billion in sales and disclosed their greenhouse gas emissions were included in assessments of 12 sustainability indicators. The recognition comes ahead of Domtar’s Sustainability Strategy launch on May 6. …Throughout the past 20 years, Corporate Knights has recognized Domtar and its legacy companies, including Paper Excellence and Catalyst Paper, with many distinctions for advancing a sustainable economy. 

Additional coverage, by Corporate Knights: The 25 most sustainable private companies in the world [includes Kruger]

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Forestry in B.C. is at a crossroads. It deserves to be treated as the major project it is

By Kim Haakstad, president and CEO, Council of Forest Industries
Vancouver Sun
April 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada West

At the Council of Forest Industries convention, Premier David Eby underscored the provincial government’s commitment to forestry as a major project — and made it clear that forestry will be treated with the same focus and urgency, saying, “This is a shared project that we can get to that 45 million (cubic metre) target, which we all know is absolutely essential.” …Eby’s commitment to a “whole of government” approach is exactly what the sector needs. …We applaud Forest Minister Ravi Parmar’s recent announcements… Equally important is ensuring BCTS delivers its full potential. Consistently hitting 90 per cent or more of its annual harvest target is critical to a thriving wood products industry that supports communities and workers throughout the province. We also can’t lose sight of reconciliation. Increasing the distribution of stumpage fees to First Nations is one achievable step that would help advance shared prosperity and strengthen Indigenous participation in the sector.

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BC’s top court upholds increased notice period for pulp and paper engineer induced to leave secure job

HR Law Canada
April 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

An appeal contesting a 12-month notice period awarded to an operations specialist who had been recruited from a long-term, secure position has been dismissed by the BC Court of Appeal. The case, which centered on the issue of inducement in wrongful dismissal claims, establishes that even modest forms of inducement can justify an increased notice period when an employee leaves secure employment for a position that terminates after a relatively short period. A chemical engineer with 27 years of service at Catalyst Paper on Vancouver Island, was contacted by Mercer Celgar Limited Partnership in 2018. …When his employment was terminated without cause as part of a downsizing… Celgar had paid five months’ salary in lieu of notice. The trial judge determined that he had been induced to leave his previous employment, which warranted a longer notice period. …Celgar argued that even if there was inducement, it was “modest”. 

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BC Forest Minister says US customers ‘fearful’ of protesting duties

By Les Leyne
The Times Colonist
April 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ravi Parmar

The Trump administration’s focus on retribution against individuals and organizations that disagree with him may be curbing B.C.’s effort to rally U.S. protests against lumber price hikes. …Forests Minister Ravi Parmar said US organizations and businesses that will have to deal with higher lumber prices when the higher duties hit seem reluctant to speak up. “It’s hard to imagine a large democracy like the US where … industry organizations were fearful of standing up because they didn’t want to get their heads cut off by the president. “How crazy is that?” …Parmar said he hopes people get a chance to make their case known. …The US National Association of Home Builders has highlighted the downsides to consumers and objected to the tariff war and the duties. …Parmar also took a shot at Canadian lumber firms that have been buying up US mills in recent years while curtailing BC operations.

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Levies chipping away at Canada’s lumber industry

By Yang Gao
China Daily
April 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

By raising duties on Canadian lumber, the United States is contending that the producers benefit from unfair subsidies and sell products below market value. However, British Columbia Premier David Eby called it an “attack on forest workers and British Columbians” on April 5.  …Harry Nelson, an associate professor of forestry at the University of British Columbia, said the increase stems from Washington’s annual review of its trade remedy findings. “The main reason for the significant increase is that both rates went up, the antidumping especially so.” …Nelson said some companies such as Canfor face a nearly 50 percent tariff and could be unsustainable. “Lumber margins tend to be small — certainly not 50 percent, and it is hard to imagine how Canfor will be able to continue to operate,” he said. “I would expect a curtailment in production, where higher-cost firms may either take temporary downtime or permanently shutter some more mills.”

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What Happened in Vanderhoof After the Sawmill Closed

By Isaac Phan Nay
The Tyee
April 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

When forestry contractor Mike Egli heard the sawmill in Vanderhoof was closing, he was expecting the worst. Egli co-owns logging contractor Dalchako Transport with his brothers. As with many local forestry companies, Dalchako’s livelihood was tied to the Plateau sawmill, Vanderhoof’s largest employer. With more than 200 workers, the sawmill was integral to the local economy. It closed at the end of December 2024. Egli has found other contracts to keep working since December, but the mill’s closure has caused a massive upheaval. “We lost all that work there,” he said. …Meanwhile, workers in Vanderhoof are looking to other industries to make a living. It’s a shift many northern B.C. workers have had to make before. …Not all workers are leaving the industry. Mayor Moutray said local forestry contractors are commuting 200 kilometres to Quesnel, B.C., for work, or flying into remote work camps to stay in forestry.

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Saving BC forestry will take radical rethinking

By Kennedy Gordon
Prince George Citizen
April 12, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

David Eby

Think of last week’s BC Council of Forest Industries (COFI) conference in Prince George as a swift kick in the Carhartts for our forestry sector. …However, as the conference made clear, Prince George — and the whole industry — faces some major hurdles. With the future of the U.S.-Canada trade relationship uncertain, the industry faces more headwinds. …For far too long, BC and Canada have focused on the U.S. market. BC Hydro chair and former premier Glen Clark pointed out; it’s time to look elsewhere — particularly to Asia. …Countries like Japan, where Canada has seen its market share drop in recent years, represent a huge opportunity. …But diversification isn’t just about new markets. It’s also about innovation. …From advanced tools to smarter, more efficient logging equipment, the industry is evolving. …The industry itself needs to be open to new ideas, including further co-operation with Indigenous partners.

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Quebec’s Beaucerons ain’t afraid of no trade war

By Martin Patriquin
The Logic
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada East

SAINT-GEORGES, Quebec — “Good year, bad year, Americans will always buy our stuff,” Vincent Boutin says. He’s one of a legion of maple syrup farmers in Quebec who export more than 100 million pounds of the stuff to the US each year—and the tariffs don’t bother him one bit. …His confidence stems in part from the caramel-coloured liquid gushing from his wood-fired boiler. It’s hot and sweet, with all the complexities of a good sherry, and you can hardly get it anywhere other than Quebec, home to 66% of the world’s maple syrup production in 2024. …Still, La Beauce’s close relationship with the US has made its economy uniquely vulnerable to the whims of the Trump administration. More than 65% of La Beauce’s businesses export directly to the US, chief among them softwood lumber, construction materials, machinery, steel and finished metal products. 

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N.B. Power being forced to offer larger rate discounts to forestry mills

By Robert Jones
CBC News
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

NEW BRUNSWICK — A New Brunswick government regulation, written to protect pulp and paper mills from high electricity prices, is forcing N.B. Power to increase the rate subsidies it offers mills this year by 35%, despite a deterioration in the utility’s own financial condition. The mill subsidies, which have been mandated by the New Brunswick government every year since 2012, have been set by the Department of Energy for the current fiscal year at $28.04 per megawatt hour, an increase of $7.29 over last year. The utility had not originally budgeted to finance a subsidy that large and said it has revised the expected cost of the program for this year to $16.6 million — up by $2.9 million. …Pulp and paper companies have defended the program in the past as critical to their long-term viability. But since the program began, N.B. Power’s own financial viability has become an issue.

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Driving Innovation, Expanding Opportunities: The Softwood Lumber Board 2024 Annual Report Is Now Available

The Softwood Lumber Board
April 24, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Softwood Lumber Board (SLB) recently published its 2024 Annual Report, which details the organization’s impact generating more softwood lumber demand by expanding new and emerging markets and protecting existing markets. “The SLB and its funded programs—the AWC, Think Wood, WoodWorks, and SLB Education—are putting the lumber industry in a stronger position than ever before,” said SLB President & CEO Cees de Jager. “Despite a challenging market for multifamily and nonresidential construction, the SLB delivered strong demand growth for the industry in 2024, generating 1.6 billion board feet of incremental demand and influencing 1,498 projects, representing 66 million square feet.” Since 2012, the SLB and its partners have cumulatively generated more than 15.3 billion board feet in demand, equating to an average return of 86 incremental board feet for every $1 invested. In 2024, the SLB continued to target investments across its key program areas of codes, communications, conversions, and education through its funded programs, partnerships and initiatives. 

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Beyond Tariffs: A Nuanced Look at US-Canada Lumber Trade

By Peter Stewart
ResourceWise Forest Products Blog
April 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The US-Canada lumber trade is a cornerstone of the North American forest products industry, frequently spotlighted for its tariff disputes and economic stakes. Recent policy shifts have reignited discussions about supply chains, costs, and market resilience, often casting the relationship as a battleground of competing interests. Yet, beneath the headlines lies a more intricate story—one of interdependence, mutual benefit, and evolving global dynamics that shape the forest value chain. ….Canada relies on the US for over 70% of its lumber export market, while the US benefits from both Canadian supply and export opportunities for finished goods. This interdependence contrasts with calls for rapid US production increases. While expanding domestic capacity could offset imports, the scale and timeline of such efforts face practical limits, leaving cross-border trade a critical factor in meeting US demand. …The US-Canada lumber trade is not a simple story of dependency or rivalry but rather a multifaceted partnership shaped by geography, economics, and market needs.

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Trump says China tariffs won’t stay at 145%, Bessent hints at deescalation

Yahoo! Finance
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

President Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent hinted at a trade-war deescalation with China, as Wall Street hoped the US was preparing for an off-ramp from the weeks-long trade battle. “145% is too high, it will come down substantially,” Trump said of the level of tariffs on Chinese imports. He said he was optimistic about trade talks, adding that he plans to be “very nice” to China to reach a deal. Trump’s comments came after Bessent told investors in a closed-door summit Tuesday that he sees a deescalation in the US-China tariff situation, prompting a US stock rally on Tuesday that carried into Wednesday. Bessent called the tit-for-tat tariffs with China unsustainable, echoing the sentiments shared with Yahoo Finance last week that he was optimistic about “clarity” on tariffs. …China said it is open to trade talks with the US but struck a still-defiant tone.

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Pixelle Specialty Solutions Pauses Chillicothe Mill Closure

Pixelle Specialty Solutions LLC
April 18, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — Pixelle Specialty Solutions announces that, based on a framework agreed upon today among the Company, H.I.G. Capital, and government officials, Pixelle will delay the closure of the Chillicothe, Ohio, paper mill until the end of the year. This decision follows productive discussions with leaders at the federal, state, and local levels and reflects a shared commitment to exploring sustainable, long-term solutions for the facility and its workforce. “Pausing the closure provides us additional time to evaluate what’s possible,” said Ross Bushnell, President and CEO of Pixelle. …Among the key leaders engaged in this process is Senator Bernie Moreno, who today announced plans to establish a permanent Senate office in Chillicothe to support the mill’s future and monitor progress. Pixelle will continue coordinating with its ownership group to define next steps and work towards a mutually agreeable solution. 

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Trump’s tariffs drive up homebuilding costs amid Oregon’s housing crisis

By Kyra Buckley
Oregon Public Broadcasting
April 21, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Developer Greg Drobot hope to sell the houses they’re building in Coos Bay for around $400,000. …Keeping costs down means paying attention to the price for every detail. Drobot said instead of plywood, the project was going to use a less-expensive oriented strand board from Canada. “When the tariffs hit, it made it almost cost-prohibitive for us to use that,” Drobot said. …Tariffs are almost certain to put Oregon’s new home construction goal further out of reach. Imported components are going up in price, as are the tools and equipment needed to build new homes. Gov. Tina Kotek said she’s concerned tariffs will make it harder and more expensive to get materials like wood — even though Oregon produces some wood products. …Drobert’s project has about a 15% contingency on cost… If prices go up more than that, he will pass on the cost to the homebuyer or find ways to cut costs.

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Is it ‘Made in USA’? The answer can be complicated

By Scott Newman
NPR – National Public Radio
April 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

As tariffs reshape supply chains, more Americans may be checking packaging for the “Made in USA” label, either to sidestep import taxes or to support domestic businesses. …According to the Federal Trade Commission, to qualify for the label, US authorities must determine that a product’s final assembly or processing has taken place in the US, and that a significant portion of its manufacturing costs must also be incurred domestically. …That said, some foreign components are allowed to still qualify as “Made in USA.” — as long as they don’t substantially transform the product. …However, bilateral trade agreements can override these rules. Under the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, a one-time importation of a commercial product valued under $2,500 is exempt from country of origin labeling requirements.

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President of Eugene wood treatment plant gets 90-day prison term for lying to inspectors

By Maxine Bernstein
Oregon Live
April 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

A federal judge Tuesday sentenced the president of Eugene’s J.H. Baxter & Co. wood treatment plant to 90 days in prison for lying about the company’s illegal handling of hazardous waste at the site. U.S. District Judge Michael J. McShane called Georgia Baxter-Krause, 62, an “absent president” who took little responsibility for what occurred. “The fact that you lied when confronted suggests you knew the practice was not ‘above board,’” McShane said. “There has to be some accountability.” [to access the full story an Oregon Live subscription is required]

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Oregon’s Wood Product Manufacturing Industry Is Still Important, Especially in Rural Areas

By Brian Rooney
Southern Oregon Business Journal
April 20, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Once Oregon’s largest manufacturing industry, employment in the wood product manufacturing industry has gone through large, well-publicized losses since the early 1990s. Its employment has dropped below that of computer and electronic manufacturing and food manufacturing in recent years, but it remains the third largest manufacturing industry. Despite the losses, wood product manufacturing is still a large industry in Oregon and is especially important to rural areas of the state. Over the long term, between 1990 and 2020, annual average employment in wood product manufacturing dropped 24,100, or 52%. Similar losses were experienced in all its subsectors. Sawmills and wood preservation dropped 5,900 (49%); plywood and engineered wood products dropped 9,500 (53%). …Even with the long-term decline, wood product manufacturing is still a large industry in Oregon. In 2024, there were 22,400 jobs and roughly $1.5 billion in total payroll in the industry. 

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Builders FirstSource continues acquisition streak

DWM Door and Window Market
April 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Builders FirstSource has announced an acquisition for the third time in four months. The company announced last week that it is taking on Truckee Tahoe Lumber Company (TTL), a family-owned business that has served the Northern Sierra-Nevada region since 1931. It’s the fourth such announcement in six months, following Rhode Island’s Douglas Lumber in October 2024; Alpine Lumber Company in Englewood, Colorado, just before Christmas; and O.C. Cluss Lumber & Building Supplies from Uniontown, Pennsylvania, in February. According to Builders FirstSource, TTL has built “a stellar reputation for providing high-quality lumber, building materials, and expert design services across its seven locations.” The company also says that local leadership will remain in place, ensuring continuity and a seamless transition.

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West Fraser has found a potential buyer for the old Perry sawmill

By Adrian Andrews
WUSF NPR
April 23, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: US East

PERRY, Florida — The plant is now under contract to be sold to a developer who plans to repurpose the land. …West Fraser permanently closed its doors in March of last year. …West Fraser tried to scale back operations a year before by cutting staff and only keeping a small skeleton crew, but they say that didn’t work. …Now, the county’s Director of Economic Development Bob Cate has a plan that he hopes will create local jobs and bring revenue back to the community. …“We have several sites, but this will be premium one because it’s going to be nice and clean,” Cate said.

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New Hampshire timber industry officials say uncertainty around tariffs causing problems

By Kelly O’Brien
WMUR9
April 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

KINGSTON, New Hampshire — Some New Hampshire businesses, including in the state’s timber industry, are worried about the ongoing effects of tariffs. The timber industry has deep roots in New Hampshire, but businesses said it’s a scary time for them with so much uncertainty caused by the tariffs. …Joseph Carrier, of Hardwood Sawmill in Henniker, said China and Canada are the two biggest countries his company ships to, but it can’t because of the tariffs. “Our two biggest markets got shut off, essentially within a week of one another,” he said. “And right now, we’re scrambling.” Related businesses such as loggers, foresters and timberland owners also say they’re affected by the tariffs. “It’s the entire supply chain. Absolutely,” said Jasen Stock, executive director of New Hampshire Timberland Owners. “From the stump right up to the two-by-four.” Northland Forest Products has been in Kingston for over 50 years. 

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What is next for employees at the Chillicothe Paper Mill?

By Destiny Torres
Chillicothe Gazette
April 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

CHILLICOTHE ― The white smoke from the long smokestacks in Chillicothe will be no more later this year, after 215 years in business. This comes after Pixelle Specialty Solutions announced the closure of its mill. The closure was announced April 15, according to CEO Ross Bushnell. Chillicothe Mayor Luke Feeney said his heart goes out to those affected by the closure. …Mike Throne, CEO of Chillicothe Ross Chamber of Commerce, said the Chamber’s primary concern is the well-being of the employees and their families. …The County Commissioners released a statement. …The CEO of the National Association of Manufacturers, shared deep sorrow for the closure. …”The Mead paper mill is an institution that has been part of the fabric of the community for generations,” Timmons said. …Gov. Mike DeWine said “We’re talking to our team to see if there’s anything that we can do to be of help.” [a free subscription is required to read this article]

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Pixelle paper mill closure to impact 800 workers in Chillicothe, Ohio

WBNS TV
April 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio — The Pixelle paper mill in Chillicothe will soon close, impacting about 800 employees. Ross Bushnell, president and CEO of Pixelle Specialty Solutions, called the decision “extremely difficult” in a statement released Tuesday. The company cited an effort to “align its operational footprint with long-term business objectives” as part of its reason for closure. Operations are expected to wind down in phases over the coming weeks. About 800 employees will be without a job. …Throne said, “Closing a cherished, long-standing institution creates a void that will be felt throughout Chillicothe.” Pixelle said “this difficult but necessary decision will allow Pixelle to strengthen its remaining operations and maintain its competitive position in the specialty paper market. …Production will be consolidated at Pixelle’s Spring Grove, Pennsylvania, and Fremont, Ohio, facilities. The closure marks the latest in a series of strategic moves for Pixelle, which recently divested its Stevens Point, Wisconsin, mill to Ahlstrom. 

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Jasper Lumber (Alabama) Investing $135 Million to Become State-of-the-Art Sawmill Facility

Trade and Industry Development Alabama
April 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Jasper Lumber Company is nearing completion on a long-term investment of more than $135 million to upgrade its sawmill facility with state-of-the-art, high-technology equipment that will position the company to be competitive and profitable in the marketplace for decades to come. Work began on mill improvements in 2020 and will reach completion in 2026. “This is huge for Jasper and comes at a time when many companies are looking at ways to downsize,” said Jasper Mayor Gary Cowen. “Jasper Lumber has long been a major employer in our city and is making an investment that really shows their commitment to the area.” Production capacity will increase to nearly 225 million board feet annually, up from 65 million, through mechanical and technological upgrades in the mill that will require a highly skilled labor force to operate and maintain the mill.

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Tariffs could get in the way of a new manufacturing facility in Maine

By Jacob Murphy
WMTW TV 5
April 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Tariffs could impact efforts to rebuild a former paper mill in Jay that was destroyed in an explosion almost five years ago. Godfrey Wood Products is looking to build a new factory on the property that would manufacture oriented strand board, a type of structural wood paneling. The company says that they have all of the permits they need, but they haven’t been able to move forward with construction because of uncertainty with tariffs. A lot of the equipment they need would come from Europe. “The stated goal of all of this tariff business is to, incentivize domestic manufacturing. Well, hell, I’m trying my level best to become a domestic manufacturer of OSB in Jay, Maine, and it seems like the public policy of the country is trying to thwart that,” said John Godfrey, owner of Godfrey Wood Products.

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US and global economies to slow sharply due to Trump’s tariffs, International Monetary Fund warns

By Olesya Dmitracova
CNN Business
April 22, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

London—President Donald Trump’s unpredictable tariff policy and countermeasures by America’s trading partners will likely deal a heavy blow to economies worldwide, with US prosperity hit particularly hard, the International Monetary Fund warned Tuesday. Global economic growth will slow to 2.8% this year, from 3.3% last year and significantly below the historical average, the IMF forecast in its World Economic Outlook. The slowdown expected in the United States is even steeper, with its economy likely to grow only 1.8% in 2025, compared with a 2.8% expansion in 2024. Both predictions are more pessimistic than the fund’s January projections, which came before Trump’s flurry of tariff announcements took America’s average import tax to its highest level in a century. …North America, just like all regions, can’t expect any upside from the tariffs further down the line. “The long-term impact of the tariffs, if they are maintained, (will be) negative for all regions, just like the short-term impacts,” Gourinchas said.

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Russian Timber Should Expect Growth – Putin Tells Government

By Jason Ross
Wood Central Australia
April 15, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Russia’s timber industry, once worth $20 billion per year, still has very strong prospects for growth. That is according to Vladimir Putin, who spoke up about the industry during a government meeting yesterday. “I would like to note that the forestry industry has good prospects and large reserves – I would like to emphasise this: large reserves and good prospects for growth.” Putin commissioned three processing facilities: a particleboard plant in Kaluga, a decorative laminated paper plastic mill in Leningrad and a liquid food packing production floor in Moscow. This comes amid reports from Russia showing that transport companies have already begun lowering their costs—in preparation for Western companies potentially re-entering the market if and when Putin signs a ceasefire with Ukraine—leading to the relaxation of sanctions, which have already crunched more than 30% of Russia’s export markets.

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Challenging Situation for the Swedish Forest Industry

By Hilde-Gunn Bye
High North News – Nord University
April 16, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Swedish forestry companies have had a tougher start to 2025 than expected, according to a report from the Swedish Forest Industries Federation, which represents companies in the wood processing, paper, and wood mechanical industries. The report points to a combination of higher costs and lower demand, which has taken a toll on Swedish sawmills and pulp and paper producers. In addition, increased tariffs create uncertainty, as well as the strong Swedish krone. Sweden is one of the world’s largest exporters of pulp, paper, and sawn wood products. According to the Swedish Forest Industries Federation, more than 80 percent of the products are exported and the largest market is Europe. Several of the major forestry companies have production sites in Northern Sweden. Holmen’s two sawmills are outside of Skellefteå and Umeå, while SCA is located in Piteå municipality. The Swedish-Finnish company Stora Enso has two facilities in Northern Finland.

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International Paper to Divest Five European Corrugated Box Plants

PR Newswire
April 14, 2025
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

International Paper (“IP”) today announced that the company has entered into exclusive negotiations with PALM Group of Germany after receiving an irrevocable offer for the purchase of five corrugated box plants in Europe: (i) three plants in Normandy, France (namely, one box plant in Saint-Amand, one box plant in Mortagne, and one sheet plant in Cabourg); (ii) one box plant in Ovar, Portugal; and (iii) one box plant in Bilbao, Spain. Upon completion of the required French works council consultation and/or employee information processes, the parties expect to enter into a definitive share purchase agreement. The closing is expected by the end of the second quarter of 2025.

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